

Ten Lessons from the Sufferings of Richard Wurmbrand
Republished with permission from David Clements at the Professor’s Record.
This week’s episode was inspired by two martyrs. Richard Wurmbrand and Tina Peters. Wurmbrand left his mark years ago. Peters remains in prison, innocent, the poster child for suffering because of 2020’s election corruption:
I TOOK A SMALL BREAK. An eight-dollar cigar. A roof-top view of a sunset. For twelve years straight I have battled. From running for the U.S. Senate, dealing with lawfare, staring down murderers, to breaking the propaganda feed concerning our rigged elections, to having my cabin burned to the ground. I’m tapped out.
Ten Lessons from the Sufferings of Richard Wurmbrand
He forced himself to compose and memorize entire sermons in his head—one verse or one thought at a time. This kept his mind from drifting into despair or unconsciousness. He later said he preached more sermons in the carceret than in many years of freedom.
And remind yourself, if you are reading this you aren’t in a cell. Count your blessings that nothing but fear prohibits you from going on offense politically to fight against such Satanic treachery.
Light is not required for worship; only a heart is. When the culture cancels and drives biblical voices underground, the church does not need bigger platforms. It needs deeper darkness, where sermons are born and prisoners become preachers. Have you been cancelled on social media? If digital doors are closed, seek out real people and build alliances in person.
So, we keep your memory front and center.
The post DAVID CLEMENTS: Ten Lessons from the Sufferings of Richard Wurmbrand appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
